Comfortable Birdwatching Climate Begins
Continual North/North-easterly winds brings down hotness to bearable level
Dual Morning Report of 3rd & 6th October, 2014
Part one: 3rd Oct (Fri)
I am used to recording what time it needs to record the first ten species, heard or seen. The criterion helps me predict how I would fare for each occasion.
The first ten finished at eight forty-five, a definitely below average time record. I met Mr Hui, a local AFCD official-cum-birdwatcher, who told me he found two uncalling Ashy drongos. I took his hint when I strolled along the section of the catchment before the road barrier. I saw none but heard one with its silhouette moving quickly out of sight.
The morning would have ended most uneventful had I not wanted to check if the Ashy drongo remained near the road barrier. Before I went past the barrier I met a birdwave consisting mainly of bulbuls and Blue-winged minlas. I took priority of checking the Ashy drongo and failing to see it, I paced quickly back to deal with the bulbul birdwave. An Asian paradise flycatcher was soon found, a late passing bird in early October, and further searching yielded me a Black-winged cuckoo shrike, my second of the autumn.
Part 2: 6th October (Mon)
I found my Ashy drongo, prominent white face patch around eye, on the leaf-bare tree on the lawn before the road barrier, a sure sight if one would be there around seven fifteen before it flies away to the upper thicker wooded area. It was my ninth bird of the morning, the third being a Yellow-browed leaf warbler heard.
I met my first local Asian brown flycatcher of the autumn in a birdwave, and a second one in another, together with an Eastern crowned leaf warbler. The Picnic Site No. 8 was almost totally quiet but when I reached No. 9 I was surprised when I flushed up an Orange-headed thrush which was feeding on the roadside. A few moments later it flew down the slope on the right when an AFCD patrol car approached, a not unusual local happening. I stayed there trying to locate a calling Orange-bellied leafbird the kind of which had become uncommon in the past several years. The bird stayed stationary and when it flew out of sight I left.
S L Tai
[ Last edited by tsheunglai at 11/10/2014 18:39 ]